14th April 2021Comments are off for this post.

Kendal Flood Risk Management Scheme – Overview

The River Kent flows through the heart of the town of Kendal and has the highest level of protection afforded to a river in Britain, being both a Site of Special Scientific Interest and a Special Area of Conservation. It is also just outside of the Lake District National Park, and is often billed as the “Gateway to the Southern Lakes”. A number of features that the river Kent has been designated for are likely to be impacted by Kendal Flood Risk Management Scheme.

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18th May 2017Comments are off for this post.

Future Landscapes Wales

At the end of March we asked you to write to your AMs. The Welsh Government had tabled a debate on an as yet unpublished draft report called Future Landscapes Wales (FLW). This report rewrote the priorities our National Parks were to operate under and removed a vital environmental called the Sandford Principle.

AMs were being asked to debate these new priorities before they had even seen the report and you contacted them to share your concerns. Complaints from opposition AMs followed and the debate was cancelled.

The Welsh Government appeared to backtrack saying "It is important to remember this is a draft version of the report” and "these discussions are ongoing as a final report is prepared for publication before the summer recess. - BBC News March 2017
However the full report has now been released, it is unchanged from the draft. It is vague and jargon heavy but one thing is clear, the Sandford Principle, the final safeguard for environment over development is being stripped from our most important wild spaces.

The report.

The Welsh Government commissioned a review of designated landscapes and this was published in July 2015 by Prof Terry Marsden. Many including ourselves felt that the National Park and AONB designations work well for Wales and there was no real evidence that change was needed. However the report was considered and well written. Read the Marsden Report here.

The main message  of the report can be seen in recommendation 6 and 7...

Recommendation 6
There should be THREE INTERLOCKING statutory purposes for both the National Parks and AONBs.
These are:
“To conserve and enhance the distinctive landscape and seascape qualities of the area” (the Conservation Purpose)
NB this is to includes the biodiversity and environmental aspects of the area
“To promote physical and mental well-being through the enjoyment and understanding of the landscape of the area.” (the Human Well-being Purpose)
“To promote sustainable forms of economic and community development based on the management of natural resources and the cultural heritage of the area.” (the Sustainable Resource Management Purpose)
Recommendation 7
The Sandford Principle, confirming the primacy of the conservation purpose, will be applied across all the designated landscapes.

A working group under Lord Dafydd Ellis-Thomas was formed to take this report further and it’s full
report has now been published: Read the Future Landscapes Wales report here.
It is confusing, badly written, jargon heavy, and vague in what it includes. However what is missing is obvious from the appendix, whilst agreeing on the three interlocking statutory purposes listed in the Marsden report, all reference to the Sandford Principle has been removed.
This could have catastrophic consequences, the environmental safeguard that has underpinned the protection of our National Parks since it’s inception in the 1970s has been lost.

There is also no reference to the Silkin Test  that ensure major developments are controlled in these areas. Applications for developments that would be felt to have positive economic effects but also damage the environment may now have nothing to stop them.
Perhaps most importantly this change would lead to our National Parks losing their Cat V protected area status under IUCN rules. They would no longer be National Parks at all. International Union for Conservation of Nature categorisation. 

Key conservation groups given a place on the FLW working group, including the RSPB, Welsh Wildlife Trusts and the Alliance for National Parks Cymru have all refused to support the report in it’s current form. Other members of the working group , such as RWE's (yes them from the Conwy Hydro Scheme) Welsh Development Manager obviously have less concerns.

What can you do?

It is vital that our Assembly Members know how import our National Parks are to Wales and how strongly you feel about them. Our AMs must vote to oppose any new legislation based on this report that doesn’t hold the key environmental protections of Sandford and Silkin at it’s heart.
Please follow us here, on Facebook and Instagram . We will be showing how much our National Parks contribute in their current protected status and asking you to get involved.

If you live in Wales...

If you live in Wales then write to your AMs and tell them that;

"the environmental protection afforded by the Sandford Principle must be the cornerstone of any new legislation affecting National Parks."

Also copy in the Welsh Cabinet Secretary for Environment and Rural Affairs and her opposition Shadow Ministers. Find my Assembly Members.

If you live outside Wales - you can still help! 

If you live outside Wales please write to the Welsh Cabinet Secretary for Environment and Rural Affairs and her opposition Shadow Ministers

Cabinet Secretary for Environment and Rural Affairs: Correspondence.Lesley.Griffiths@gov.wales

Plaid Cymru Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Sustainable Communities, Energy and Rural Affairs: Simon.Thomas@assembly.wales

Conservative Spokesperson for Environment & Sustainability: David.Melding@assembly.wales

UPDATE:

The report has been tabled for debate on the 6th June less than a month after publication and hidden under the shadow of a Westminster election. The Welsh Government is trying to push through the biggest change to the management of our environment in a generation and do so without the knowledge of the public. Assembly Ministers have not had the time or the information to properly consult with their constituents on this crucial matter.

Remember you only have until June 6th to act.

25th March 2017Comments are off for this post.

Urgent – The Future of National Parks

On Tuesday 28th of March (this Tuesday), the Senedd in Cardiff will debate an a document not available to the public entitled "Review of National Parks and AONBs" that will strip National Parks of a key conservation principle, the Sandford Principle.

Read more

19th March 2017Comments are off for this post.

Landmark of the Year

Conwy Falls has been voted as Landmark of the Year by readers of BBC Countryfile Magazine.

This is fantastic news, as the stunning falls and gorge will doubtless receive a load more national coverage as a result.

Plummeting 15m into a cavernous pool, Conwy Falls in the heart of Snowdonia National Park has long been a popular site for visitors. The surrounding woodlands are imbued with magic and wildlife, including polecats and a wide variety of birdlife, while the River Conwy itself is a salmon river and the enchanting gorge of the Fairy Glen is just a short distance away.

Interestingly, the nominations were put forward by former director-general of the National Trust, Dame Fiona Reynolds. Now would be a great time to write to the National Trust.

Director General:
Dame Helen Ghosh,
Director-General, The National Trust,
Heelis, Kemble Drive,
Swindon , SN2 2NA ,
helen.ghosh@nationaltrust.org.uk

Head of NT wales:

Justin Albert
Director National Trust Wales
Wales Regional Office
Priest House
Tredegar House
Newport
South Wales
NP10 8YW
justin.albert@nationaltrust.org.uk

Would you want to be the engineer who has to put forward the proposal to destroy "Landmark of the Year 2017"?

15th March 2017Comments are off for this post.

Where’s the Conwy Now?

Well, happily, the Conwy is right where nature intended, flowing within her banks and supporting her delicate ecosystem. Hopefully she’s safe for now, but there’s no certainty to that.

Here’s a timeline to sum up the key events.

April 2015 - Application by RWE to build “Proposed hydro scheme up to 5MW comprising construction of intake weir, tunnel, buried pipeline, buried powerhouse building with outfall, switchgear room and transformer, and including biodiversity and recreational enhancement proposals, and alterations to existing vehicular access off the A470(T) near Fairy Glen Hotel, Betws y Coed”

March 2016 - Formally Refused by SNPA

August 2016 - Second Planning Application entered by RWE

Late September 2016 - Application Withdrawn by RWE

December 2016 - NRW Refuse Abstraction Application

Throughout this time Save the Conwy and our partners, alongside an ever growing groundswell of supporters from a multitude of backgrounds, have pushed and pushed to ensure that the National Park and Natural Resources Wales stick to their policies and core principles. All this time, there has been an elephant in the room however. The National Trust are the landowners at the proposed site above Conwy Falls. When questioned, they said their involvement was being maintained as it would not stop the project if they withdrew. Their justification for this was that RWE would just build downstream of their land. This is broadly speaking impossible! It also shows the National Trust to value the income from hydro power over the value of preserving an untouched gorge.

This post reads "Intake"

Since then, the Trust have begun work on two adjacent schemes in the Nanmor catchment damming the streams that flow from the side of Cnicht at Gelli-Iago and Llyn Llagi. It also plans to bring run of river hydro to Cwm Lloer, Cwm Tryfan, Nant yr Ogof and Cwm Cywion on the dramatic and untouched mountain sides of the Ogwen valley.

We want to make it clear that we are not against hydro power, only inappropriate siting. The scheme at Ogwen Bank is underway, and only appears to be affecting a short stretch of quarry canal. We've also learnt of another community scheme being proposed in Mynydd Llandegai, that looks to make use of an old weir. Snowdonia has plenty of industrial heritage that could be given a new lease of life before unspoiled places suffer.

Save the Conwy will continue as Save Our Rivers, and we will be continuing to work with our partners to protect free flowing rivers for recreation, for the environment, for the planet.

SaveOurRivers on Instagram -- Save_Our_Rivers on Twitter

28th November 2016Comments are off for this post.

A farewell trip to the Zambezi

Save the Conwy has just got back from an amazing trip to the Batoka Gorge on the Zambezi.

As with many others around the world this fantastic river is about to disappear under a hydro dam reservoir. A 183m high dam wall (sited at the picture below) will flood around 35 miles of river up to around 1mile from the base of the Victoria Falls UNESCO World Heritage Site.

img_1307-export

Problems with high levels of methane production in dams at this latitude are well known, recent studies show that hydro dam reservoirs account for 8% of all man-made green house gases, more the Canada's entire emissions.

BioScience paper on methane and hydro reservoirs,

The economy of nearby Livingston has grown up around the visitors to this amazing river, home to the endangered Fish Eagle, Zambia's national bird. It is hard to imagine how this community will benefit in a country almost entirely self sufficient in power already.

For more information click the link.

International Rivers , Zambezi Dam

Thanks to Seppi Strohmeier for the images and video.

14th October 2016Comments are off for this post.

In the news

The news that RWE have withdrawn their recent planning application has spread to a range of media outlets. The BBC carried several reports and John Harold Director of the Snowdonia Society featured on Good Afternoon Wales (41mins in) ...

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5th October 2016Comments are off for this post.

Saved

On Thursday 28th September 2016 RWE withdrew their planning application for the Conwy hydro scheme. This followed a phone call in which the Snowdonia National Park Authority planning department, forced by the overwhelming evidence presented to it

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21st September 2016Comments are off for this post.

Is the Planning Officer Tired of Experts?

There have been a large number of objectors to the scheme, and recently those from within the National Park themselves have come to light

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20th September 2016Comments are off for this post.

Tree Officer Objects

In common with the Senior Ecologist the National Parks Tree Officer has serious concerns about the proposed Conwy Falls HEP scheme. The problem lies with the incredibly restrictive CMS (construction method statement) the developer had proposed in order to convince the National Park that serious environmental damage will not occur.

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20th September 2016Comments are off for this post.

Breaking Planning Policy

The Conwy Falls HEP scheme was refused at it's first try because the application didn't hold enough information or visuals on the likely impact to the landscape ...

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